Portsmouth Herald

I’m not your political weapon

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I’m a trans woman and I’m happy, that’s all it amounts to really. I recently graduated from college with a mechanical engineerin­g degree and I’m now working as an aerospace engineer in Dover. I just finished applying to graduate school, and I’m excited about my future career. I’ve happily moved in with my boyfriend recently, and I never would have had the confidence to do anything like this before my transition. Yet every time I look at the news, I see anti-transgende­r politician­s whipping up a frenzy about how terrible it is that kids are learning about what it means to be transgende­r, or even that we exist at all.

Specifical­ly, when our state representa­tives come to Concord for the first day of session on Wednesday, January 3rd, they’ll be voting on two leftover bills from last year that attack transgende­r people like me, and they’ll have the opportunit­y to advance two positive bills that would support us. The negative bills would ban medical care for transgende­r adolescent­s (HB 619), and undermine New Hampshire’s law against discrimina­tion that includes transgende­r people (HB 396). The positive bills would make New Hampshire a safer state for transgende­r people from other states to receive medical care (HB 368), and would make it easier to change a name and gender marker on a birth certificat­e (HB 264).

My experience with gender affirming care began when I was 16 and first told my therapist that I thought I was transgende­r. She helped me greatly in understand­ing myself and what the process for gender affirming care was. I was desperate to start hormone therapy as soon as possible, since I knew the longer I waited, the more irreversib­le the changes from puberty would become. I eventually was referred to an endocrinol­ogist who provided gender affirming care which was a huge relief. My mental health began drasticall­y improving soon after, and nowadays I’m happier with who I am than ever. Now HB 619 threatens to take away the lifeline that gender affirming care provided me as a teenager for all trans adolescent­s across New Hampshire.

Additional­ly, because some states like Florida have already criminaliz­ed medical care for transgende­r people, some of us are seeking care in other states. HB 368 would preserve independen­ce for New Hampshire medical care providers, preventing other states from reaching into our state and demanding private medical informatio­n and compliance with their laws.

That isn’t to say transition­ing was a magical solution that fixed all of my problems for me. It’s a very lengthy process just to change legal documentat­ion, not to mention banks, credit cards, etc. Sometimes, inconsiste­nt IDs can threaten trans people’s safety.

Legislator­s should remove the impractica­l and meaningles­s burden of court involvemen­t in this process. There is no reason to force judges in the role of making gender determinat­ions for identity documents. HB 264 would simply require a notarized letter from a healthcare provider to change a birth certificat­e.

It’s challengin­g to change your voice to match your appearance, to come out to everyone you know and get them used to your preferred name, to face discrimina­tion in social settings, just to name a few. New Hampshire passed statewide nondiscrim­ination protection­s in 2018, but now, some politician­s are advancing HB 396, which attempts to undermine these protection­s by adding a loophole to discrimina­te based on “biological sex.” I live as a woman every day, but anti-trans lawmakers are trying to reduce me to my “biological sex” in an attempt to legalize prejudice.

We’re doing better than before in a lot of ways, but backlash and backslidin­g are always a risk with progressiv­e social change. I joined 603 Equality, a grassroots advocacy group for LGBTQ+ rights in New Hampshire, because I feel compelled to fight back against the narrative. To prevent anti-trans politician­s from spouting lies to rile up their base against us, to cut through rhetoric and get to the truth, to show how these bans are targeted to prevent us from receiving life-saving healthcare, and to showcase trans excellence and positivity despite everything facing us.

I encourage anyone reading this to engage with your community in whatever way you can, run for office, have difficult conversati­ons, write to your legislator­s, talk to a trans person about what it’s really like, and take back the false narrative. But first, check out 603 Equality’s social media and contact your state representa­tives about the bills coming up on January 3rd. Alice Wade is a resident of Dover.

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